Title: Resources gathered by animals
1Resources gathered by animals
- Food for energy and macromolecules
- Water
- Shelter from enemies (Enemy Free Space)
- Space
- Thermal energy
- Chemicals used for signaling
2Animals are Heterotrophs Plants are Autotrophs
- Heterotrophs are incapable of producing their own
energy as plants do via photosynthesis - Heterotrophs must consume food that contains
energy, and both organic and inorganic chemical
nutrients
3Some Animals obtain their food symbiotically
- Corals, and some sponges and jellyfish contain
symbiotic algae that photosynthesize and transfer
energy to their coral hosts in exchange for
certain nutrients - Thermal vent worms (Annelida Vestimentifera)
obtain most of their nutrients from symbiotic
bacteria in exchange for H2S and CO2 that they
absorb from the water - Some beetles (ambrosia) transport, farm, and
consume fungi to obtain most of their nutrients
and energy - No animals can obtain all their energy without
transfer from or consumption of other organisms
4Annelida Vestimentifera Thermal vent tube worms
5- For any animal, a nutritionally adequate diet is
essential for homeostasis, a steady-state balance
in body functions. - A balanced diet provides fuel for cellular work
and the materials needed to construct organic
molecules.
- A nutritionally adequate diet satisfies three
needs - fuel (chemical energy) for all the cellular work
of the body - the organic raw materials animals use in
biosynthesis (carbon skeletons to make many of
their own molecules) - essential nutrients, substances that the animals
cannot make for itself from any raw material and
therefore must obtain in food in prefabricated
form.
6Homeostatic mechanisms manage an animals fuel
- The flow of food energy into and out of an animal
can be viewed as a budget, with the production
of ATP accounting for the largest fraction by far
of the energy budget of most animals. - ATP powers basal or resting metabolism, as well
as activity, and, in endothermic animals,
temperature regulation. However, most
invertebrates are ectothermic their body
temperatures conform to the ambient temperature
of their environment
7- Nearly all ATP is derived from oxidation of
organic fuel molecules - carbohydrates, proteins,
and fats - in cellular respiration. - The monomers of any of these substances can be
used as fuel, though priority is usually given to
carbohydrates and fats. - Fats are especially rich in energy, containing
twice the energy of an equal amount of
carbohydrate or protein.
- When an animal takes in more calories than it
needs to produce ATP, the excess can be used for
biosynthesis. - This biosynthesis can be used to grow in size or
for reproduction, or can be stored in energy
depots.
8An animals diet must supply essential nutrients
and carbon skeletons for biosynthesis
- In addition to fuel for ATP production, an
animals diet must supply all the raw materials
for biosynthesis. - This requires organic precursors (carbon
skeletons) from its food. - Given a source of organic carbon (such as sugar)
and a source of organic nitrogen (usually in
amino acids from the digestion of proteins),
animals can fabricate a great variety of organic
molecules - carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids.
9- Besides fuel and carbon skeletons, an animals
diet must also supply essential nutrients. - These are materials that must be obtained in
preassembled form because the animals cells
cannot make them from any raw material. - Some materials are essential for all animals, but
others are needed only by certain species. - For example, ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is an
essential nutrient for humans and other primates,
guinea pigs, and some birds and snakes, but not
for most other animals.
10- Animals require 20 amino acids to make proteins.
- Most animals can synthesize half of these if
their diet includes organic nitrogen. - Essential amino acids must be obtained from food
in prefabricated form. - Eight amino acids are essential in the adult
human with a ninth, histidine, essential for
infants. - The same amino acids are essential for most
animals.
11- While animals can synthesize most of the fatty
acids they need, they cannot synthesize essential
fatty acids. - These are certain unsaturated fatty acids,
including linoleic acids required by humans. - Most diets furnish ample quantities of essential
fatty acids, and thus deficiencies are rare.
12- Minerals are simple inorganic nutrients, usually
required in small amounts. - Mineral requirements vary with animal species.
- Humans and other vertebrates require relatively
large quantities of calcium and phosphorus for
the construction and maintenance of bone among
other uses. - Iron is a component of the cytochromes that
function in cellular respiration and of
hemoglobin, the oxygen binding protein of red
blood cells.
13The four main stages of food processing are
ingestion, digestion, absorption, and elimination
- Ingestion, the act of eating, is only the first
stage of food processing. - Food is packaged in bulk form and contains very
complex arrays of molecules, including large
polymers and various substances that may be
difficult to process or may even be toxic.
14- Animals cannot use macromolecules like proteins,
fats, and carbohydrates in the form of starch or
other polysaccharides. - First, polymers are too large to pass through
membranes and enter the cells of the animal. - Second, the macromolecules that make up an animal
are not identical to those of its food. - In building their macromolecules, however, all
organisms use common monomers. - For example, soybeans, fruit flies, and humans
all assemble their proteins from the same 20
amino acids.
15- Digestion, the second stage of food processing,
is the process of breaking food down into
molecules small enough for the body to absorb. - Digestion cleaves macromolecules into their
component monomers, which the animal then uses to
make its own molecules or as fuel for ATP
production. - Polysaccharides and disaccharides are split into
simple sugars. - Fats are digested to glycerol and fatty acids.
- Proteins are broken down into amino acids.
- Nucleic acids are cleaved into nucleotides.
16- Chemical digestion is usually preceded by
mechanical fragmentation of the food - by
chewing, for instance. - Breaking food into smaller pieces increases the
surface area exposed to digestive juices
containing hydrolytic enzymes.
- After the food is digested, the animals cells
take up small molecules such as amino acids and
simple sugars from the digestive compartment, a
process called absorption. - During elimination, undigested material passes
out of the digestive compartment.
17Digestion occurs in specialized compartments
- To avoid digesting their own cells and tissues,
most organisms conduct digestion in specialized
compartments. - The simplest digestive compartments are food
vacuoles, organelles in which hydrolytic enzymes
break down food without digesting the cells own
cytoplasm, a process termed intracellular
digestion. - This is the sole digestive strategy in
heterotrophic protists and in sponges, the only
animal that digests food this way.
18- (1) Heterotrophic protists engulf their food by
phagocytosis or pinocytosis and (2) digest their
meals in food vacuoles. - (3) Newly formed vacuoles are carried around the
cell (4) until they fuse with lysosomes, which
are organelles containing hydrolytic enzymes. - (5) Later, the vacuole fuses with an anal pore
and its contents are eliminated.
19- In most animals, at least some hydrolysis occurs
by extracellular digestion, the breakdown of food
outside cells. - Extracellular digestion occurs within
compartments that are continuous with the outside
of the animals body. - This enables organisms to devour much larger prey
than can be ingested by phagocytosis and digested
intracellularly.
20- Many animals with simple body plans, such as
cnidarians and flatworms, have digestive sacs
with single openings, called gastrovascular
cavities. - For example, a hydra captures its prey with
nematocysts and stuffs the prey through the mouth
into the gastrovascular cavity. - The prey is then partially digested by enzymes
secreted by gastrodermal cells. - These cells absorb food particles and most of the
actual hydrolysis of macromolecules occur
intracellularly. - Undigested materials are eliminated through the
mouth.
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22- In contrast to cnidarians and flatworms, most
animals have complete digestive tracts or
alimentary canals with a mouth, digestive tube,
and an anus. - Because food moves in one direction, the tube can
be organized into special regions that carry out
digestion and nutrient absorption in a stepwise
fashion.
23- Food ingested through the mouth and pharynx
passes through an esophagus that leads to a crop,
gizzard, or stomach, depending on the species. - Crops and stomachs usually serve as food storage
organs, although some digestion occurs there too. - Gizzards grind and fragment food.
- In the intestine, digestive enzymes hydrolyze the
food molecules, and nutrients are absorbed across
the lining of the tube into the blood. - Undigested wastes are eliminated through the
anus. - This system enables organisms to ingest
additional food before earlier meals are
completely digested.
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25Some animals use external digestion for the
initial stages of digestion
- Some seastars (Echinodermata) evert their
stomachs out of their mouths to partially digest
prey before retracting their stomachs back into
their bodies - Spiders inject digestive enzymes into the bodies
of their prey before lapping up the resulting
broth of partially digested prey tissues
26Animals feed on a variety of biological materials
- Animals fit into one of several dietary
categories. - Herbivores, such as butterflies and moths, and
many snails, eat mainly autotrophs (plants,
algae). - Carnivores, such as wasps, jellyfish, spiders,
and arrow worms (Chaetognatha), eat other
animals. - Omnivores, such as cockroaches, crabs, sponges,
and Annelida, consume animal and plant or algal
matter. - Detritivores, such as earth worms eat dead plant
material - Scavengers, such some beetles (Dermestidae)
consume the carcasses of dead animals - Fungivores, such as some beetles and flies
consume fungi - Coprophages, such as some beetles and flies
consume dung
27Chaetognatha arrow worm planktonic marine
predator
28Seastar predator with eversible stomach
29Animals use a diverse variety of adaptations for
feeding
- The mechanisms by which animals ingest food are
highly variable. - Many aquatic animals, such as clams, are
suspension-feeders or filter-feeders that sift
small food particles from the water. - Many marine and aquatic animals, such as snails,
limpets, and caddisflies are surface-feeders or
grazers that consume bacteria, algae, and fungi
on rocks, dead plant material, and other
substrates
30Polychaeta fan worm a filter feeder
31- Deposit-feeders, like earthworms, eat their way
through dirt or sediments and extract partially
decayed organic material consumed along with the
soil or sediments. - Internal-feeders live in their food source,
eating their way through the food. - For example, maggots burrow into animal
carcasses and leaf miners tunnel through the
interior of leaves.
32- Fluid-feeders make their living sucking
nutrient-rich fluids from a living host and are
considered parasites. - Mosquitoes and leaches suck blood from animals.
- Aphids tap the phloem sap of plants.
- Bees are fluid-feeders that inadvertently aid
plants, by transferring pollen as they move from
flower to flower to obtain nectar.
33Predators use different tactics to obtain prey
- Sit and wait predators such as crab spiders,
ambush bugs, corals, ant-lions and anemones wait
for their prey to stumble upon them rather that
actively hunting for prey - Active foraging predators such as wasps, ants,
seastars, and some snails, seek out and subdue
prey
34Parasites may be internal, external, or
parasitoids
- Many parasites such as tapeworms (Cestoda), some
flies (Hippoboscidae, Sarcophagidae) live within
their hosts tissues thus solving the need for
food and shelter simultaneously - Other parasites are merely attached to the
surface of the host such as ticks (Acarina) and
lice (Hexapoda Anoplura and Mallophaga) - Among parasitic wasps and flies, the juvenile
lives on or in the host body, but kills the host
when the parasite matures. Parasites that kill
their hosts are called parasitoids
35Water
- Most invertebrates obtain water from their
aquatic environment, their food, or by metabolic
production of water - However, terrestrial invertebrates in desert
environments may also collect water from dew, or
have particular adaptations that reduce water loss
36Enemy Free Space
- Shells and Spines
- Feeding from burrows, webs, galls, mines, or
other defensive structures - Distastefulness
- Chemical exudates
- Feeding at night
- Crypsis and camouflage
- Disruptive coloration
- Warning coloration
- Mimicry
- Feeding commensally with a predator
37Mollusca - Shells
Bivalvia - Bivalves
Scaphopoda Tusk shells
Cephalopoda
Polyplacophora - Chitons
38Gastropoda - spines
39Feeding from defensive structures
Leaf mine and beak marks
Wasp gall, aphids, and ants
40Chemical exudates
Pieris rapae, cabbage butterfly
41Chemical Exudates
(A-C) Pupa of C. sanguinea responding to
stimulation with bristle of a fine paint brush.
The jaw-like "gin traps" on the back of the pupa
are ordinarily held agape (arrows in A).
Insertion of the bristle into a trap causes the
pupa to flip upward, with the result that the
bristle is "bitten". (D) Pupa of Mexican bean
beetle (E. varivestis), in dorsal view. Note the
glandular hairs, with glistening droplets of
secretion at the tip, that fringe the pupa. (E)
Enlarged view of glandular hairs of E. varivestis
pupa. (F) Ant (Crematogaster cerasi) that has
just contacted the glandular hairs of an E.
borealis pupa (left) with an antenna, cleaning
that antenna by brushing it with a foreleg.
42Feeding at night
- Many animals feed at night to avoid visually
searching predators (moths) - Crustaceans around reefs and in seagrass beds
43Warning coloration
Flabellina iodinea (Mollusca Nudibranchia)
44Crypsis
45Mimicry
Distasteful Palatable Model Mimic
46Mimicry
Chromodoris magnifica (Mollusca Gastropoda)
Pseudoceros sp. (Platyhelminthes Turbellaria)
47- PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTION PREYS VIEW
- C. AVOIDING CAPTURE
- 4. MIMICRY
- TEPHRITID FLY BY GREENE
- -TEPHRITID FLIES MIMIC PREDATOR BY WAVING
PATTERNED WINGS
48- PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTION PREYS VIEW
- TEPHRITID FLY BY GREENE
49- OTHER PREDATORS ATE ALL 5 FLY TYPES
- JUMPING SPIDER RETREATED FROM A AND B
50Feeding commensally with a predator
51Shelter
- Lobsters feed from burrows
- Hermit crabs occupy empty shells of Gastropod
molluscs - Shrimp shelter in algal mats and grass beds and
forage onto mud flats and sandy sea bottoms at
night - Many Annelid worms build protective tubes or
burrows
52Space
- Many species of intertidal marine invertebrates
compete for space to settle and attach to the
substrate (barnacles, mussels, etc.) - Settlement of larval invertebrates can be
inhibited by the presence of chemical cues
produced by competing or predatory species, and
enhanced by cues produced by conspecifics
53Space
Anthopleura elegantissima - acrorhagi
Mytilus (mussel) and Pisaster (starfish)
54Acquiring Thermal Energy by Basking
- Some insects bask to increase their body
temperature so that they can be active even when
air temperatures are low - Some insects sit in flowers which act like
parabolic reflectors concentrating reflected
sunlight on the insect and increasing its body
temperature
55Chemicals for signaling and defense
- Called Pharmacophagy
- Observed in some adult Lepidoptera (moths and
butterflies) - Adult males which are non feeding collect
pyrrolizidine alkaloids for sex attractants and
larval defense - Alkaloids passed to female with the spermatophore
56Pharmacophagy in Comosoma myodora
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58Summary
- Invertebrate acquire resources in a wide variety
of ways - Food , followed by enemy-free space are the most
important resources - Even within groups of related animals there is
considerable variety of feeding habits